Jim Hubbard (born 1949) is a New Zealand cartoonist. He joined the Daily Telegraph (Napier, New Zealand) in 1985. [1] His work has appeared in a number of New Zealand newspapers, including the Dominion Post , Bay of Plenty Times , the Southland Times , the Daily Telegraph (Napier), the Northern Advocate and the Otago Daily Times . [2] He won the New Zealand Cartoonist of the Year in 2011 at the Canon Media Awards. [1]
Along with Garrick Tremain, Eric Heath and Burton Silver, he designed a stamp for New Zealand Post in 1997. [3]
Gerald Anthony Scarfe is an English satirical cartoonist and illustrator. He has worked as editorial cartoonist for The Sunday Times and illustrator for The New Yorker.
The New Zealand Herald is a daily newspaper published in Auckland, New Zealand, owned by New Zealand Media and Entertainment, and considered a newspaper of record for New Zealand.
The Otago Daily Times (ODT) is a newspaper published by Allied Press Ltd in Dunedin, New Zealand. The ODT is one of the country's four main daily newspapers, serving the southern South Island with a circulation of around 26,000 and a combined print and digital annual audience of 304,000. Founded in 1861 it is New Zealand's oldest surviving daily newspaper – Christchurch's The Press, six months older, was a weekly paper until March 1863.
Thomas Joseph Scott is a New Zealand cartoonist. In the 1990s, he won New Zealand Cartoonist of the Year six times, and won the award again in 2009.
Robert Ellison Brockie is a New Zealand cartoonist, scientist, columnist and graphic artist.
Garrick Tremain is a New Zealand cartoonist and painter living in Queenstown.
Michael de Adder is a Canadian editorial cartoonist and caricaturist.
Allan Charles Hawkey is a cartoonist based in Hamilton, New Zealand. He was editorial cartoonist for the Timaru Herald between 1982 and 1990, signing himself as 'Hawkeye'. His cartoons have appeared in the Waikato Times since 1998 .
The Auckland Star was an evening daily newspaper published in Auckland, New Zealand, from 24 March 1870 to 16 August 1991. Survived by its Sunday edition, the Sunday Star, part of its name endures in The Sunday Star-Times, created in the 1994 merger of the Dominion Sunday Times and the Sunday Star.
Sharon Murdoch is a cartoonist born in 1960 in Invercargill, New Zealand. She is the first woman to regularly produce political cartoons for New Zealand mainstream media, and draws the cartoon cat Munro who accompanies the daily crossword in Fairfax newspapers. Murdoch has won New Zealand Cartoonist of the Year three times: 2016, 2017 and 2018.
Benjamin R. Garrison is an American alt-right political cartoonist and artist. Several of Garrison's cartoons have been controversial. Various critics in the media have called him sexist, racist, anti-feminist, xenophobic, anti-government, and conspiratorial. Garrison has also been accused of antisemitism by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). His cartoons often lionize American conservative figures and politicians, such as former and current President-elect Donald Trump and Rand Paul and often express favorable views of Trumpism and its political positions, and demonize liberal, moderate, and Never Trump movement figures such as President Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton. Some alt-right activists and Internet trolls have edited Garrison's comics to incorporate further offensive content, including the antisemitic "Happy Merchant" caricature.
Guy Keverne Body is a New Zealand cartoonist.
Trace Hodgson is a New Zealand cartoonist. He began cartooning for the Christchurch Press in 1979. His work has appeared in the New Zealand Listener, NZ Truth, Christchurch Press, New Zealand Times, Nelson Mail and the Dominion Post. He became the Listener's political cartoonist in 1984.
Neville Maurice Colvin was a New Zealand-born cartoonist and illustrator. Dr Warren Feeney has referred to him as "alongside [David] Low [...] undoubtedly New Zealand's most famous international illustrator".
Bob Darroch is an illustrator, author and cartoonist from New Zealand. He writes and illustrates the popular Little Kiwi series of children's books, for which he received the Storylines Gaelyn Gordon Award in 2015. Darroch's cartoons have appeared in a number of newspapers, including the Whangarei Report, Hutt News, Napier Daily Telegraph, Christchurch Star and Timaru Herald. He has also illustrated two jigsaw puzzles.
John Henry Gilmour was a New Zealand cartoonist. He was born in Christchurch and drew for the Canterbury Times, the Christchurch Star, the New Zealand Free Lance and the New Zealand Truth. He lived in England for several years from 1932, where he drew for the Evening Standard. During this time he also worked as a cartoonist for the British Union of Fascists and his work appeared in the movement's newspapers Fascist Week and The Blackshirt until 1935. He returned to New Zealand in the late 1930s, again working for Truth and the Star.
Shaun Yeo is a New Zealand freelance cartoonist and illustrator living in Invercargill. He produces daily political cartoons for the Otago Daily Times.
Wilfred Noel Uppadine Cook (1896–1981) was a New Zealand artist, illustrator, cartoonist and comics artist and a pioneer of science fiction comics. He worked in New Zealand, Australia and England.
Keith Roy Waite was a New Zealand-born editorial cartoonist. He has been referred to as one of the 'greatest-ever social and political cartoonists' in Britain.